The role Vinicius Junior played in Real Madrid signing Jude Bellingham
Real Madrid star Vinicius Junior has revealed that he pestered Jude Bellingham to join the club throughout last season.
2023-10-05 23:30
Progressive activist Cornel West leaves the Green Party and will run for president as an independent
Progressive activist Cornel West will run for president in 2024 as an independent, not as a member of the Green Party
2023-10-05 23:28
Man, 77, meant to sell ill-gotten erectile drugs in sprawling Florida retirement community, feds say
Federal authorities have arrested a 77-year-old man for allegedly buying more than $1,800 in erectile dysfunction drugs without a prescription and intending to sell them in the massive central Florida retirement community The Villages and elsewhere
2023-10-05 23:26
No. 17 Miami set to open ACC play against Georgia Tech
No. 17 Miami puts its unbeaten start to this season on the line against Georgia Tech on Saturday night
2023-10-05 23:25
Michelin to rate hotels as well as restaurants
From stars to keys -- the Michelin Guide will start rating hotels in the same way as restaurants, it...
2023-10-05 23:19
Apple Watch Series 9 vs. Google Pixel Watch 2: How are they different?
The Goole Pixel Watch 2 is here, less then a month after Apple launched its
2023-10-05 23:17
Prosecutors say former George Santos campaign treasurer will plead guilty to unspecified charge
Prosecutors say the ex-campaign treasurer for U.S. Rep. George Santos is scheduled to enter a guilty plea to an unspecified felony in connection with the federal investigation of financial irregularities surrounding the indicted New York Republican
2023-10-05 23:13
Earth hit by blast of energy from dead star so powerful that scientists can’t explain it
Earth has been hit by a blast from a dead star so energetic that scientists cannot explain it. The burst of gamma rays, originating in a dead star known as a pulsar, is the most high energy of its kind ever seen. It was equivalent about ten trillion times the energy of visible light, or 20 tera-electronvolts. Scientists are unable to explain exactly what kind of a scenario could lead a pulsar to emit such intense energy, and the researchers behind the breakthrough say that it “requires a rethinking of how these natural accelerators work”. Scientists hope that they can find yet more powerful energy blasts from pulsars, with a view to better understanding how they are formed. Pulsars are formed when a star dies, exploding in a supernova and leaving behind a tiny, dead star. They are just 20 kilometres across, and spin extremely fast with a powerful magnetic field. “These dead stars are almost entirely made up of neutrons and are incredibly dense: a teaspoon of their material has a mass of more than five billion tonnes, or about 900 times the mass of the Great Pyramid of Giza,” said Emma de Oña Wilhelmi, a scientist at the High Energy Stereoscopic System observatory in Namibia that detected the blast. As pulsars spin, they throw out beams of electromagnetic radiation, throwing it out like a cosmic lighthouse. That means that someone in one spot – like the Earth – will see the radiation pulses flash in a regular rhythm as they spin past. The radiation is thought to be the result of fast electrons that are produced and thrown out by the the pulsar’s magnetosphere, which is made up of plasma and electromagnetic fields that surround the star and spin with it. Scientists can search the radiation for different energy bands within the electromagnetic spectrum, helping them understand it. When scientists previously did that with the Vela pulsar examined in the new study, they found that it was the brightest everseen in the radio band, and the brightest persistent source in the giga-electronvolts. But the new research found that there is a part of the radiation with even more high energy components. “That is about 200 times more energetic than all radiation ever detected before from this object,” said co-author Christo Venter from the North-West University in South Africa. Scientists don’t know exactly how that could happen. 
“This result challenges our previous knowledge of pulsars and requires a rethinking of how these natural accelerators work,” says Arache Djannati-Atai from the Astroparticle & Cosmology (APC) laboratory in France, who led the research. “The traditional scheme according to which particles are accelerated along magnetic field lines within or slightly outside the magnetosphere cannot sufficiently explain our observations. “Perhaps we are witnessing the acceleration of particles through the so-called magnetic reconnection process beyond the light cylinder, which still somehow preserves the rotational pattern? But even this scenario faces difficulties to explain how such extreme radiation is produced.” An article describing the findings, ‘Discovery of a Radiation Component from the Vela Pulsar Reaching 20 Teraelectronvolts’, is published today in the journal Nature Astronomy. Read More ‘Ring of fire’ solar eclipse this month will be last until 2046 Mystery behind massive star suddenly vanishing decoded New discovery is ‘holy grail’ breakthrough in search for aliens, scientist say ‘Ring of fire’ solar eclipse this month will be last until 2046 Mystery behind massive star suddenly vanishing decoded New discovery is ‘holy grail’ breakthrough in search for aliens, scientist say
2023-10-05 23:13
WNBA first: Hammon, Brondello make history as ex-players coaching teams in the Finals
Coaches Becky Hammon and Sandy Brondello friendship goes back to their days in San Antonio
2023-10-05 23:10
How to Get the Tactical DMR in Fortnite
Players can get the Tactical DMR in Fortnite by finding the new weapon in chests, vaults, ground loot, or Holo Chests.
2023-10-05 23:08
How to Stream Five Nights at Freddy's Movie: Platforms, Release Date
People know Five Nights at Freddy's is coming to theaters, but will the movie come to streaming platforms?
2023-10-05 23:08
No. 15 Oregon State visits California with little margin of error in Pac-12 title race
No. 15 Oregon State heads into this week's trip to California knowing it can ill afford any more slipups if the Beavers want to contend for the Pac-12 title after losing two weeks ago to Washington State
2023-10-05 23:05
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